The Arecibo Multibeam Survey (palfa) published its results in papers published from 2006 to 2022 with a total of 175 new pulsars discovered. It detected a grand total of 134 pulsars. The fastest pulsar discovered was J1906+0454 with a period of 2.08328 milliseconds and the slowest pulsar was J1946+24 with a period of 4.729 seconds.
The smallest pulsar dispersion measure was J1847+01 with a DM of 20.1 pc/cc and the largest pulsar dispersion measure was J1901+0459 with a DM of 1108.0 pc/cc. There were a total of 1556 pulsars known before the first discovery was published. This survey increased the total amount of known pulsars by 11.0%.
There were 15 papers written about the discoveries of this survey: Arecibo Pulsar Survey Using ALFA. I. Survey Strategy and First Discoveries, Arecibo Pulsar Survey Using ALFA. II. The Young, Highly Relativistic Binary Pulsar J1906+0746, An Eccentric Binary Millisecond Pulsar in the Galactic Plane, PSR J1856+0245: Arecibo Discovery of a Young, Energetic Pulsar Coincident with the TeV γ-Ray Source HESS J1857+026, Arecibo Pulsar Survey Using ALFA: Probing Radio Pulsar Intermittency And Transients, Pulsar Discovery by Global Volunteer Computing, Arecibo PALFA Survey and Einstein@Home: Binary Pulsar Discovery by Volunteer Computing, Two Millisecond Pulsars Discovered by the PALFA Survey and a Shapiro Delay Measurement, Four Highly Dispersed Millisecond Pulsars Discovered in the Arecibo PALFA Galactic Plane Survey, Timing and Interstellar Scattering of 35 Distant Pulsars Discovered in the PALFA Survey, Timing of Five Millisecond Pulsars Discovered in the PALFA Survey, Einstein@Home Discovery of a PALFA Millisecond Pulsar in an Eccentric Binary Orbit, Arecibo Pulsar Survey Using ALFA. IV. Mock Spectrometer Data Analysis, Survey Sensitivity, and the Discovery of 40 Pulsars, PALFA Single-pulse Pipeline: New Pulsars, Rotating Radio Transients, and a Candidate Fast Radio Burst, Eight Millisecond Pulsars Discovered in the Arecibo PALFA Survey.